The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, February 07, 1984, Image 4

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    H
UNDERGROUND DELI AND STORE
Page 4/The Battalion/Tuesday, February 7,1984
THE diet place Local unit helps girls
OPEN
BREAKFAST
LUNCH
7:30am - 10:30am
10:30am - 3:30pm
Mon— Friday
“QUALITY FIRST”
deal with pregnancy
By THERESA CORNELL
Reporter
MSC RUMOURS
Are You Tired Of The Same Old Lunch?
Stop By MSC RUMOURS And Check
Out Our Menu!
Behind the Post Office in the MSC
Open M-F 9-4
Big Screen TV, Fountain Drinks, A Variety
of Lunch Items, Dannon Yogurt, Blue Bell Ice
Cream
Counselors at the Good Sa
maritan Pregnancy Service say
they will do anything they can
to help a woman who is trou
bled by her pregnancy — ex
cept one thing. They will not
refer her to an abortion clinic.
Good Samaritan, located in
the Pines Professional Building
on West Brookside Road off
South College Avenue, was be
gun by St. Mary’s Catholic
Church, and although it no
longer has an official church af
filiation, it has retained the
Catholic stand against abortion.
“We are the alternative to
abortion,” director Beverly Og
den says. “Most girls come from
low income groups and are just
AUTO INSURANCE
FOR AGGIES
Call: George Webb
Farmers Insurance Group
3400 S. College 823 8051
MSC Hospitality Proudly Presents
It’s Showtime...
The 5th Annual
Miss Texas A&M
Scholarship Pageant
Saturday, Feb. 25, 1984 7:00 p.m.
Tickets on Sale Now at Rudder Box Office
845-1234
Student &, Senior Citizens $3.50
All other $6.00
(It will be a great time!)
concerned with day-to-day sur
vival. They find out they’re pre
gnant and don’t know what to
do. We show her that there is a
way to have her baby, rather
than having an abortion.”
Good Samaritan was begun
three years ago by Father A1
Palermo of St. Mary’s Church.
As religious counselor, Palermo
says he tries to show women the
religious aspects of abortion.
“We help the girl to make the
decision that is right for her,”he
says. “She comes first. Our basic
concern though, is finding al
ternatives to abortion.”
The Good Samaritan Preg
nancy Service offers counseling
and financial assistance for wed
or unwed pregnant women who
do not want an abortion. They
refer women to adoption and
welfare agencies, to homes such
as the Edna Gladney Home in
Fort Worth, and to doctors who
charge little or nothing for pre
natal care.
Although some of the volun
teers and counselors are Catho
lic, Good Samaritan is not a
Catholic organization. Palermo
said people of various denomi
nations come to volunteer or to
get help and advice. Good Sa
maritan counseled over 300
women aged 13 to 37 last year.
Beverly Ogden, who has
worked with pregnancy coun
seling for five years, says that as
a referral service, Good Samari
tan suggests doctors, adoption
agencies, and such government
welfare programs as Aid for
Dependent Children. Odgen
says some girls have no home,
family or job and need financial
assistance. Good Samaritan
helps with medical expenses
from donations received, but is
on a limited budget.
“We ask the girls to pay as
much as they can,” Ogden says.
“Doctors do help. We have
some who are also against abor
tion. They charge little or noth
ing for prenatal care, but we
can only send them so many
girls.”
Around town
Order graduation announcements
May and DVM graduates must order their graduate
announcements before Wednesday. Announcements cat
be ordered in the MSC Student Finance Center, 217 MSC
from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Red Cross sponsors blood drive
The Brazos County Chapter of the American RedCrcs
Association will finish its monthly blood drive todayalOut
Savior’s Lutheran Church in College Station fromnooniu.
til 6 p.m. Those who are between 17 and 65 years ofajt
and weigh more than 110 pounds are encouraged todonaj
blood.
Entomologist discusses pesticide
&
Uni’
Ai
ls dona
duction
ras in ai
ergy p
country
sugar ci
The
inent,"
has be
parts of
;o Hoik
Undi
The Central Texas Chapter of the American Registrynl
Professional Entomologists is sponsoring a seminar tfe
addresses the impact of pesticides on health. Tani Adam
director of the Texas Pesticide Research and Education^
Project, will speak at aa seminar tonight at 7 :30 pms
room 101 of the Entomology Building. The publicise
vited.
Pi
fii
Good Samaritan refers some
girls to the Department of Hu
man Resources which can help
them with job training, renting
an apartment and obtaining
free nursery services. Maternity
clothes and cribs also are pro
vided.
Park to begin
development
For girls without families,
Good Samaritan can offer a
home with a family in the
Bryan-College Station area.
Students to spend
$2 million at Padre
By Karen Wallace
Staff Writer
The first phase of devel
opment for the Texas A&rM Re
search Park will begin this fall
says Dr. Mark L. Moijey, vile
chancellor for research and cor
porate relations.
United Press International
SOUTH PADRE ISLAND —
Officials estimate more than
100,000 vacationing students
will spend around $2 million on
this South Texas island resort
and surfers’ haven during
spring break next month.
Although most of them dress
like beach bums while frolicking
up and down the Gulf of Mex
ico beach and sand dunes, a
Chamber of Commerce survey
shows many of the youngsters
come well heeled when liber
ated from the classroom.
“A survey done of students
who come to the island for their
ring break vacations shows
at 49 percent of them come
here with between $300 and
$1,000 to spend on their vaca
tion.
“Multiply that by the vast
number of students who come
sp
tn;
AGGIE
here and you have a very signif
icant percentage of the tourist
dollar for any one month out of
the calendar year,” said Coleen
Carnevale, promotions director
for the Chamber of Commerce.
The study, based on a survey
of 4,391 students taken over a
two-year period by a New York
marketing research firm, said 8
percent of the students bring
from $5,000 to $10,000 and an
other 5 percent come with more
than $10,000.
Most of the throng will be on
the island between March 6 and
March 18 to join in two con
certs, beach games, dances and
other events being sponsored
by beer breweries, sun tan lo
tion manufactures and film
producers.
A concert by the beach music
duo Jan and Dean will take
place on March 15, while Joe
“King” Carrasco will peform on
March 11, both sponsored by
major breweries.
“The first phase includes
roads, landscaping and utilities
and begins this year on 110
acres of the 318-acre park,”
Money says.
Development of the park is
beginning on the west side of
campus between University
Drive, Jersey Street and the
West Bypass. However, there
still seems to be some confusion
about the purpose of the park.
Money says.
“This isn’t a real estate devel
opment,” he says. “We aren’t
trying to move the College Sta
tion and Bryan busineses to the
park site. Rather, we want to
provide a site that will attract re
search oriented, high technol
ogy industries,” he says.
The University pays for land
scaping such as roads and utili
ties and will sell park spaces to
industries, Money says. These
iridustries are in charge of any
construction on their spaces, he
says.
Money, who directed the
University of Utah Research
Park for 12 years, says having a
research park near or on a uni
versity campus is beneficial to
both the inaustries and the uni
versity.
First, both will benefit from
the cooperative research pro
jects that can be done between
private enterprises and the uni-
fired f
loused
restigat
nto ch
irison i
Two
were fir
ials —
— wen
units ar
ections
:uts, ao
‘‘man Ric
A fin
|'or one
as reli
pokesn
The
he resi
estigat
eport
ent wa
rict J u<
versity, he says. Industrial
efit because they can us
campus research facilities
any specialized equipa
Also, employees wouldle
to lake advantage of them
recreational facilities,hesiit
Another plus is the
ate employee selectionaui
to the industries, hesays.ll
are students available id
part-time and graduates
ested in career opportuniK
These job opportunities fl^onitoi
efit the students as wdla faster
industries. Working witht;
dustry before graduation
vides good experience
some cases, on-the-jobtraiG
Finally, the park will enh
the University’s image it
eyes of research-relatetl
sources, he says.
The park will take a
time to fully develop, wi
initial developmenttakinyls
15-to-20 years, Money says,
“It's not a short-range,f
fix development scheme.’
says. “W'e’re developingfi
long run.”
For example, the Uniffl
of Utah Research Park tod
years to develop
the Stanford Industrial 11
one of the first researchpti
took 30 years to developl
acres, Money says.
“That’s a long time
ering the rapid growth rati
the area and the Targe gradl
program,” he says. a
There’s no way of telling!
long the development
Texas A&M Research Pad
take because the parkstillii
the developmental stages
industry spaces are not
Money says.
Unit
HU>
Depart
'arden
#1
O
How to make peace withTblstoy.
REGISTER
YOUR
STUDENT
ORGANIZATION!
If the academic wars are getting you down, declare a cease-fire. Take a break
with a rich and chocolatey cup of Suisse Mocha. It's just one of six delidousl)’
different flavors from
General Foods®
International Coffees
January 31 - February 14
213 PAVILION
GENERAL FOODS® INTERNATIONAL COFFEES.
AS MUCH A FEELING AS A FLAVOR
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